2015
DOI: 10.1021/acs.energyfuels.5b01960
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Role of Ethyl Cellulose in Bitumen Extraction from Oil Sands Ores Using an Aqueous–Nonaqueous Hybrid Process

Abstract: A major drawback associated with current hot or warm water-based bitumen extraction processes is the high consumption of energy. To address this issue, an aqueous–nonaqueous hybrid bitumen extraction process (HBEP), in which a portion of the diluent (solvent) was added upfront to soak mined oil sands prior to its water-based extraction, was proposed and demonstrated to be feasible to process mineable oil sands at ambient temperatures. This study investigates the effect of adding ethyl cellulose (EC) as a promi… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Heating water to higher temperature in the WBE process requires large energy consumption and creates high GHG emission concerns. To address these challenges, a novel HBE process was developed in previous studies . A key advantage of HBE is that it can be operated at 20°C while yielding comparable or higher bitumen recoveries and froth qualities compared to higher‐temperature WBE …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Heating water to higher temperature in the WBE process requires large energy consumption and creates high GHG emission concerns. To address these challenges, a novel HBE process was developed in previous studies . A key advantage of HBE is that it can be operated at 20°C while yielding comparable or higher bitumen recoveries and froth qualities compared to higher‐temperature WBE …”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The commercial CWHE‐based processes that utilize hot or warm water and sometimes caustic, consume large amounts of thermal energy and produce stable FFT. Recently, both bench and pilot scale studies have demonstrated that an aqueous/nonaqueous hybrid bitumen extraction (HBE) process is a potential alternative to commercial CHWE . In HBE, a fraction of solvent already applied in froth treatment is distributed upstream to soak the mined ore before slurry conditioning, following which the water‐based process is applied as usual, but at ambient operating conditions and without caustic addition .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Recently, Lin et al . found that ethylcellulose (EC) is an effective demulsifier which can get rid of more than 90% of water from water‐in‐bitumen emulsions at an optimal dosage, and systematically studied the demulsification mechanisms . EC was shown to demulsify water‐in‐bitumen emulsions through flocculation‐promoted coalescence of water droplets, displacement, and disruption of the interfacial films and destabilize the emulsions .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%